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How to start
figure drawing
by mitch leeuwe
YOU’LL LEARN:
• how to start
• what to do
• how to apply
Copyright © 2019 by Mitch Leeuwe
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof
may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever
without the express written permission of the publisher
except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
mitchleeuwe.nl
Printed in the Netherlands
First Printing, 2019
Layout: Harmke Pasterkamp
harmke.com
How to start
figure drawing
by mitch leeuwe
introduction
Thank you for reading my figure drawing
book. I started this book by the habbit of
doing a daily figure drawing warmup each
day. Figure drawing is important because it’s
a great way of learning to draw fast. Because
in 30 minutes you can draw 30 1 minute
poses, so you really draw a lot in a short
period of time. If you do that daily just think
how much poses you drawn. This is a great
habbit, because even if you don’t have a lot of
time you still can do this and over time really
make a lot of drawing milage. And the next
time you draw an illustration you take all that
experience of all those figure drawings with
you. Each time you are doing a figure drawing
session you can focus on one of the principles
of drawing. Like construction, line of action,
story, gesture, space, overlap, foreshortening,
drawing hands, anatomy and more. In this
book I show my studies and tell about what I
tried to learn. I hope this is interesting for you
and inspires you to do more figure drawing.
Mitch Leeuwe
how to start
Maybe there is a place where you live you
can do some figure drawing. Drawing from
life is the best way. But maybe you don’t have
that option. In that case the internet is great.
There are tons of sources to do figure drawing
from. Search on google or youtube for figure
drawing and you’ll find so many sources!
There are many different ways of figure
drawing. I usually do every day 30 to 60
minutes of practise. And sometimes I do 1
minute poses and other times 5 minute poses.
But not longer than that, or else It’s more an
illustration. I always try to experiment a bit
with it.
Tip: Try different things and find out what you like
line of action
I always start looking at the model and ask
myself: “What is the story behind this pose
and how can I translate that to a line of
action?”
line of a pose for practise. When you focus on
drawing this for a while you will understand
the movement much better and prevent
youself from drawing stiff.
The best way to learn to use action lines is
by observation and drawing only the action
The key to a good line of action is: Keep it simple.
line of action
shapes
An other good thing to focus on is shape.
Instead of drawing an action line. Aks your
self how can I translate this pose to a shape.
It’s a good excersise because you are
learning yourself how to think of the model
in front of you as one shape and as a whole.
And not as a seperate head, torso etc.
Silhouette
You can do the same thing with silhouette. A
clear silhouette is really important, if you can
get this clear it really helps making you’re
figure readable.
With a silhouette you can clearly see the
negative and positve space. The positive
space is all the black and the negative space
is all the white. For example the arm is
positive space and the negative space is the
white between the arm, shoulder and head.
If your pose isn’t really clear in silhouette
making those negative shapes bigger can
help make you’re pose way more clearer.
space & perspective
Using space or perspective. Sometimes it
really helps to exaggerate a bit what you see.
One way you can do that is to add a bit more
perspective. That makes your figure way more
dramatic and dynamic. You don’t always see
this extreme perspective in life when you are
drawing a model or drawing from a screen.
But adding a bit more perspective in your
drawing makes it a lot more interesting. You
can also add a more dramatic perspective to
create more space between the body parts so
the pose is more readable and the negative
shapes bigger than the source you’re drawing
from.
space & perspective
simplify
Making a pose in 1 or 2 minutes means that
you need to be fast. So try to find ways to
simplify your figures more. You can redraw
your illustrations and try to draw them a bit
more simplified. This can be really hard to
do. As you can see in this example I tried to
simplify my drawings. When you have drawn
a couple of poses you can try redo them and
look what you can leave out and try less more
lines. The more you practise this, the more
you will use this automaticly the next time. Try
to go as extreme as you can. Sometimes we
can suprise ourselves by how far we can go.
My advise: push it until it breaks.
simplify
anatomy
Learning simple construction and anatomy
of the human figure can help you become
faster because you don’t have to think so
much about it when you are draing. For figure
drawing I use this basic anatomy to remind
myself of the proportions and the shapes
I need to use to build the human figure.
Sometimes if I have a hard time, I first draw
a figure from the front so I can use that as
a guide for the poses I need to draw. Using
reference and some examples is something
I really recommend. Keep using it untill it’s in
your head. I also try to have some clear steps
that are easy to remember.
anatomy
C-S-I Shapes
There are three types of lines you can use
when you are drawing a figure. C, S and I. It’s
important to mix those lines up. For example,
if you start with a C you can follow it with
a S or an I. But try to avoid two C’s next or
opposite of each other. Because if you do
that you get parallel lines in you’re drawing
and that doesn’t feel naturally but feels more
mechanicly. So you could use it on purpose if
you want to make things feel mechanicly. But
if you want to make your poses dynamic and
fluid, use CSI and try to mix it up as much as
possible.
Tip: Also try to mix with long, medium and short lines
building blocks
Sometimes it’s hard to draw your figure in
the three dimensions of space. It’s really
important to be able to think in 3D when
you’re drawing characters, because you don’t
want your characters to look stiff and static.
It you use basic shapes that are easy to turn
around in 3D, it will get a lot easier. After a
while you will learn to think in those shapes.
The most basic shapes you should use to
build your figure with are a sphere, cilinder
and a cube. Try drawing some difficult poses
with only those three shapes. I think this is a
great way to understand how you can create
a sence of depth on a sheet of paper.
Overlap
balance
It’s important to use overlap in your drawings,
because this creates a sence of depth. When
you put two shapes on top of each other you
can clearly see which one is in the front and
wich one is in the back. So try to find some
points where you can emphasize the lines
where there is overlap. Like in the example
next to this text.
Always check if your character is in balance.
If you work digital you could flip your canvas
and if you’re working on paper you can take
a mirror and see the drawing flipped trough
the mirror. This helps seeing mistakes. In the
example next to the text I show how you can
check it with drawing a dot in the weightpoint
and draw a line straight down. This way you
can see that she isn’t toppling over.
Apply the pose
I do figure drawing because eventually I want
to use the knowledge for my own character
poses. In the example I show how I used
reference to create these poses. Most of
the time I look for poses of people online,
but sometimes I act them out myself and
photograph it to use as reference.
Some people say using reference is bad.
But I don’t agree with them. Ofcourse: You
shouldn’t steal other peoples work. But you
can look at a pose, become inspired and try
to capture the idea behind it. Always to try to
take something as a reference and make that
stronger in your drawing.
Tip: Try to exaggerate the pose in your drawing
sketchbook
I draw as much in a sketchbook as I can.
Besides it’s good to have a break from
working at the computer all day, it also helps
with learning to draw faster. It’s so easy on
your computer to undo and try again, but on
paper you just keep going after a mistake.
I like to draw with fineliners or a cheap
Tip: Always have a sketchbook with you
biro because you can’t erase those lines.
Remember that a sketchbook isn’t a portfolio,
but it’s a book where it’s OK to make mistakes
and learn from it. I try to find a sketchbook
that has good paper quality but that isn’t too
expensive so that I don’t feel guilty when I
mess up a page.
exaggerate
Try to push your poses as much as possible.
When you see a model striking a pose, try to
think what the story is behind that pose. When
you draw the action line, start thinking about
the story and how you can translate that to a
line as good as possible. So you actually don’t
copy the figure of the model but you try to get
Tip: Push it until it breaks
the story behind it and exaggerate that in the
drawing. So, always try to make the drawing
stronger than the real thing. That’s the fun
part of drawing: you are in control of how it
looks. “Push it until it breaks” is a mantry I
keep telling myself. When I think I got to far I
push it a bit back in a new one.
Gallery
Here are some more of my drawings.
Try looking and them and think about the
anatomy, construction, line of action, overlap,
exaggeration and more you can think of. Also
look at other people’s figure drawing work. A
lot of artist are posting their work on instagram
so find for some hastags about figure drawing
Tip: Analyze other people’s figure drawing
to follow. It’s also good to make a habbit of
sharing your work on social media so you
can meet and connect with other people who
are doing the same. I hope you enjoyed this
book and show me some figure drawings you
have made! Also let me know if you have any
questions about drawing.
mitchleeuwe.nl
instagram: mitchleeuwe
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